Abstract

ObjectiveWe present prenatal diagnosis of a 4p16.3 interstitial microdeletion associated with bilateral cleft lip and palate and short long bones on prenatal ultrasound, and we discuss the genotype–phenotype correlation. Materials and methodsA 32-year-old woman underwent amniocentesis at 22 weeks of gestation because of bilateral cleft lip and palate and short limbs on prenatal ultrasound. Conventional cytogenetic analysis was performed on cultured amniocytes and parental bloods. Oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) was performed on the DNAs extracted from uncultured amniocytes, parental bloods and umbilical cord. Metaphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was performed on cultured amniocytes. ResultsAmniocentesis revealed a karyotype of 46,XY. The parental karyotypes were normal. aCGH analysis on uncultured amniocytes revealed a 1.66-Mb interstitial microdeletion at 4p16.3 encompassing 23 Online Mendelian Inheritance of in Man (OMIM) genes including FGFRL1 and TACC3. The parents did not have such a deletion. The pregnancy was subsequently terminated, and a malformed fetus was delivered with typical Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) facial appearance and bilateral cleft lip and palate. aCGH analysis of the umbilical cord confirmed the prenatal diagnosis with a result of arr 4p16.3 (72,447–1,742,649) × 1.0 [GRCh37 (hg19)]. Metaphase FISH analysis of cultured amniocytes confirmed a 4p16.3 microdeletion. ConclusionHaploinsufficiency of FGFRL1 and TACC3 at 4p16.3 can be associated with bilateral cleft lip and palate of WHS facial dysmorphism and short long bones. Prenatal diagnosis of facial cleft with short long bones should raise a suspicion of chromosome microdeletion syndromes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call